Member: CraigClevenger

CraigClevenger Back on S.G. after a long time.

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Member: CraigClevenger
Member: CraigClevenger Member: CraigClevenger Member: CraigClevenger

MEMBER SINCE: November 2005

occupation: Novelist

gets me hot: Women with glasses; women who snort when they laugh

into: Books, Film, Tropical Birds, Good Company

body mods: Left sleeve; Right upper sleeve

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SEPTEMBER 30, 2008 @ 02:04 PM | NO COMMENTS

Rare First Sedition

In a sort of backward approach to commemorating Banned Books Week, I'm reposting one of my favorite curve balls: a 'book review' I wrote for the Santa Barbara Independent, which originally appeared on June 24, 2004.

In anticipation of our forthcoming Independence Day, I took to spelunking the political science shelves for some appropriate reviewing material. Imagine my complete lack of surprise when confronted by a wall of inflammatory volumes from both the Left and the Right, written with crystal-clear hindsight and assailing the evils of the opposite end of the political spectrum, asserting the corruption of mass media by the other party, along with the occasional Green, Anarchist, or Libertarian author insisting that every other viewpoint has it wrong.

One of the most compelling books I did find was by far the most seditious. While not stating any party affiliation, the author pulls no punches in the opening pages by succinctly declaring the duties of a government, and the rights of the people should a government be derelict in its duty: "Whenever any Form of Government becomes destructive of these Ends, it is the Right of the People to alter or to abolish it, [italics mine] and to institute a new Government." Later in the same paragraph, he states, "It is their Right, their Duty, to throw off such Government, [again, the italics are mine] and to provide new Guards for their future Security." In our post-9/11 America, this is a title that I'm absolutely certain would have me detained (at best) by airport security were I to quote from it aloud in conversation at a check-in gate.

In The Declaration of Independence (Cato Institute Edition, paperback, 60 pages, $4.95), author Thomas Jefferson departs from the current political debate with his assertion that a change to the existing political system is not enough; rather, it is the obligation of the governed to build an entirely new system once the old one fails in its duties to the people.
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